A blog provided by University of Georgia Law Library compiling call for papers for conferences/symposiums.

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At present, women make up an average of 17% of the judges of international courts and tribunals. There is significant variation in the proportion of women on the benches of different legal regimes. To better understand and assess this inequality, PluriCourts and iCourts invites papers for a workshop March 23-24 2017 in Oslo, Norway.

This conference offers graduate students (students enrolled in Master or PhD programmes) and early professionals/academics (generally within five years of graduating) studying or working in the field of IEL an opportunity to present and discuss their research. It also provides a critical platform where participants can test their ideas about broader issues relating to IEL. One or more senior practitioners and academics will comment on each paper after its presentation, followed by a general discussion.

25th Annual Conference of the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law Canberra, 29 June–1 July 2017 Sustaining the International Legal Order in an Era of Rising Nationalism The 25th ANZSIL Annual Conference will take place from Thursday, 29 June, to Saturday, 1 July 2017 at Hotel QT Canberra, 1 London Circuit, Canberra, Australia.

The Conference Organising Committee now invites proposals for papers to be presented at the Conference, either individually, or as a panel.

The Asper Review of International Business and Trade Law extends an invite to all business or law graduate students, academics, and practitioners to its International Business and Trade Law (INTLaw) Conference on April 25th and April 26th, 2017 at the Inn at the Forks hotel in downtown Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. We aim to have lively discussions on innovative topics in international economics, business, and trade law (including e-commerce).

A combination of technological, cultural, and economic factors during the long nineteenth century made images more readily available in a wider range of media than ever before. These transformations raised new questions about the ownership and use of images.